Proximal Humeral Fractures: The Choice of Treatment

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Proximal Humeral Fractures : The Choice of Treatment. / Brorson, Stig; wcr491, wcr491.

Orthogeriatrics: The Management of Older Patients with Fragility Fractures. Springer, 2021. s. 143-153.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Brorson, S & wcr491, W 2021, Proximal Humeral Fractures: The Choice of Treatment. i Orthogeriatrics: The Management of Older Patients with Fragility Fractures. Springer, s. 143-153. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-48126-1_10

APA

Brorson, S., & wcr491, W. (2021). Proximal Humeral Fractures: The Choice of Treatment. I Orthogeriatrics: The Management of Older Patients with Fragility Fractures (s. 143-153). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-48126-1_10

Vancouver

Brorson S, wcr491 W. Proximal Humeral Fractures: The Choice of Treatment. I Orthogeriatrics: The Management of Older Patients with Fragility Fractures. Springer. 2021. s. 143-153 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-48126-1_10

Author

Brorson, Stig ; wcr491, wcr491. / Proximal Humeral Fractures : The Choice of Treatment. Orthogeriatrics: The Management of Older Patients with Fragility Fractures. Springer, 2021. s. 143-153

Bibtex

@inbook{13b4441ae0504550b659c6cf93c6b129,
title = "Proximal Humeral Fractures: The Choice of Treatment",
abstract = "Proximal humeral fractures are strongly correlated to osteoporosis and common among older patients. The goal of treatment is to reduce pain and regain function. Most proximal humeral fractures do not benefit from surgery, but surgery may be required in the most complex fractures. Patient comorbidity and poor bone quality seem to influence the overall outcome, as well as degenerative changes in the rotator cuff. The humeral bone itself almost always heals and the risk of continued pain is low. Regardless of the treatment modality range of motion is often reduced, but still, most elderly patients achieve an acceptable functional result. The literature is extensive, but the included patient cohorts are often heterogeneous, varying from a fit golf-playing older person to a demented nursing home resident, and the results are therefore difficult to transfer into clinical practice. In most patients, quality of life tends to depend more on low pain than the range of motion and strength, which are the typical focus areas in current shoulder scores. The methodological quality of clinical studies has historically been low, but within the last decades randomised clinical studies have gained ground, which hopefully permit an era of evidence-based and tested treatment algorithms. National treatment quality standards and registries are warranted for quality measurement to further improve the outcome.",
author = "Stig Brorson and wcr491 wcr491",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-48126-1_10",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-030-48128-5",
pages = "143--153",
booktitle = "Orthogeriatrics",
publisher = "Springer",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Proximal Humeral Fractures

T2 - The Choice of Treatment

AU - Brorson, Stig

AU - wcr491, wcr491

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Proximal humeral fractures are strongly correlated to osteoporosis and common among older patients. The goal of treatment is to reduce pain and regain function. Most proximal humeral fractures do not benefit from surgery, but surgery may be required in the most complex fractures. Patient comorbidity and poor bone quality seem to influence the overall outcome, as well as degenerative changes in the rotator cuff. The humeral bone itself almost always heals and the risk of continued pain is low. Regardless of the treatment modality range of motion is often reduced, but still, most elderly patients achieve an acceptable functional result. The literature is extensive, but the included patient cohorts are often heterogeneous, varying from a fit golf-playing older person to a demented nursing home resident, and the results are therefore difficult to transfer into clinical practice. In most patients, quality of life tends to depend more on low pain than the range of motion and strength, which are the typical focus areas in current shoulder scores. The methodological quality of clinical studies has historically been low, but within the last decades randomised clinical studies have gained ground, which hopefully permit an era of evidence-based and tested treatment algorithms. National treatment quality standards and registries are warranted for quality measurement to further improve the outcome.

AB - Proximal humeral fractures are strongly correlated to osteoporosis and common among older patients. The goal of treatment is to reduce pain and regain function. Most proximal humeral fractures do not benefit from surgery, but surgery may be required in the most complex fractures. Patient comorbidity and poor bone quality seem to influence the overall outcome, as well as degenerative changes in the rotator cuff. The humeral bone itself almost always heals and the risk of continued pain is low. Regardless of the treatment modality range of motion is often reduced, but still, most elderly patients achieve an acceptable functional result. The literature is extensive, but the included patient cohorts are often heterogeneous, varying from a fit golf-playing older person to a demented nursing home resident, and the results are therefore difficult to transfer into clinical practice. In most patients, quality of life tends to depend more on low pain than the range of motion and strength, which are the typical focus areas in current shoulder scores. The methodological quality of clinical studies has historically been low, but within the last decades randomised clinical studies have gained ground, which hopefully permit an era of evidence-based and tested treatment algorithms. National treatment quality standards and registries are warranted for quality measurement to further improve the outcome.

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-48126-1_10

DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-48126-1_10

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-3-030-48128-5

SN - 978-3-030-48125-4

SP - 143

EP - 153

BT - Orthogeriatrics

PB - Springer

ER -

ID: 305559381